Recommended Posts

I've written a basic graphics engine for OpenGL-ES 1.1 in Java for Android. I use the following code to orientate the spaceships in my game to point in the direction of travel:
[source lang="java"]gl.glPushMatrix();
transforms[i].transform(gl);
gl.glLightfv(GL10.GL_LIGHT0, GL10.GL_POSITION, light0Position);
model.drawVertexBufferObjects((GL11) gl);
gl.glPopMatrix();[/source]

}[/source]
The problem is that this doesn't affect the diffuse lighting. The lighting on the ship appears without taking into account the changes made by the Orientate() method. I.e. the light is always in the same place relative to the model:

hi guys,
are there any books, link online or any other resources that discusses on how to build special effects such as magic, lightning, etc. in OpenGL? i mean, yeah most of them are using particles but im looking for resources specifically on how to manipulate the particles to look like an effect that can be use for games,. i did fire particle before, and I want to learn how to do the other 'magic' as well.
Like are there one book or link(cant find in google) that atleast featured how to make different particle effects in OpenGL (or DirectX)? If there is no one stop shop for it, maybe ill just look for some tips on how to make a particle engine that is flexible enough to enable me to design different effects/magic
let me know if you guys have recommendations.
Thank you in advance!

How do we rotate the camera around x axis 360 degrees, without having the strange effect as in my video below?
Mine behaves exactly the same way spherical coordinates would, I'm using euler angles.
Tried googling, but couldn't find a proper answer, guessing I don't know what exactly to google for, googled 'rotate 360 around x axis', got no proper answers.

References:
Code: https://pastebin.com/Hcshj3FQ
The video shows the difference between blender and my rotation:

I've had a Google around for this but haven't yet found some solid advice. There is a lot of "it depends", but I'm not sure on what.
My question is what's a good rule of thumb to follow when it comes to creating/using VBOs & VAOs? As in, when should I use multiple or when should I not? My understanding so far is that if I need a new VBO, then I need a new VAO. So when it comes to rendering multiple objects I can either:
* make lots of VAO/VBO pairs and flip through them to render different objects, or
* make one big VBO and jump around its memory to render different objects.
I also understand that if I need to render objects with different vertex attributes, then a new VAO is necessary in this case.
If that "it depends" really is quite variable, what's best for a beginner with OpenGL, assuming that better approaches can be learnt later with better understanding?